AbstractSubjects undertook a saccadic gap task, in which the fixation target is extinguished for a period before the appearance of the peripheral stimulus. The majority showed a population of short-latency express saccades in addition to the main, slower, distribution. However, closer analysis showed that nearly all of this bimodality was due to the order in which trials were performed: the faster responses came almost entirely from trials in which the target was on the opposite side from the preceding trial, slower ones when it was on the same side. Further experiments using a novel two-gap task demonstrated that this inter-trial effect is due to the return eye movement of one trial conditioning the first saccade of the next. Consequently,...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
SummaryOne popular and fruitful approach to understanding what influences the decision of where to l...
AbstractRecent theories of visual attention, such as the oculomotor readiness theory of Klein (1980)...
AbstractWe investigated the effect of randomizing different spatial and temporal parameters on sacca...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
Saccadic reaction times (SRTs) were analyzed in the context of stochastic models of information proc...
An open peer commentary of Fischer and Weber\u27s article Express Saccades and Visual Attention pu...
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
The temporal relation of competing visual stimuli may determine the corresponding oculomotor respons...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements generated in response to a gap paradigm in which the fixation light s...
AbstractResearchers have shown that the promptness to initiate a saccade is modulated by countless f...
AbstractThe variable latency of a saccade to the onset of a single target reveals our brain’s hypoth...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
The latencies of visually guided saccadic eye movements can form bimodal distributions. The 'express...
AbstractWe compared the spatio-temporal tuning of perception to the mechanisms that drive saccadic e...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
SummaryOne popular and fruitful approach to understanding what influences the decision of where to l...
AbstractRecent theories of visual attention, such as the oculomotor readiness theory of Klein (1980)...
AbstractWe investigated the effect of randomizing different spatial and temporal parameters on sacca...
AbstractHuman observers take longer to re-direct gaze to a previously fixated location. Although the...
Saccadic reaction times (SRTs) were analyzed in the context of stochastic models of information proc...
An open peer commentary of Fischer and Weber\u27s article Express Saccades and Visual Attention pu...
AbstractNeural mechanisms underlying the initiation of saccadic eye movements were studied by record...
The temporal relation of competing visual stimuli may determine the corresponding oculomotor respons...
AbstractSaccadic eye movements generated in response to a gap paradigm in which the fixation light s...
AbstractResearchers have shown that the promptness to initiate a saccade is modulated by countless f...
AbstractThe variable latency of a saccade to the onset of a single target reveals our brain’s hypoth...
AbstractThe systematic variations of regular saccadic reaction times induced in gap/overlap paradigm...
The latencies of visually guided saccadic eye movements can form bimodal distributions. The 'express...
AbstractWe compared the spatio-temporal tuning of perception to the mechanisms that drive saccadic e...
Monkeys trained to saccade to visual targets can develop separate "express" and "regular" modes in t...
SummaryOne popular and fruitful approach to understanding what influences the decision of where to l...
AbstractRecent theories of visual attention, such as the oculomotor readiness theory of Klein (1980)...